Synthesis of Polyester by Means of Genetic Code Reprogramming

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Synthesis of Polyester by Means of Genetic Code Reprogramming Atsushi Ohta, Hiroshi Murakami, Eri Higashimura, Hiroaki Suga  Chemistry & Biology  Volume 14, Issue 12, Pages 1315-1322 (December 2007) DOI: 10.1016/j.chembiol.2007.10.015 Copyright © 2007 Elsevier Ltd Terms and Conditions

Figure 1 Ribosomal Polyester Synthesis by Means of the Flexizyme (eFlexiresin or dFlexiresin) and wPURE Systems LG1 and LG2 indicate cyanomethyl and 3,5-dinitrobenzyl leaving groups, respectively (see Figure 2A). IFs, initiation factors; EFs, elongation factors; RFs, release factors. Chemistry & Biology 2007 14, 1315-1322DOI: (10.1016/j.chembiol.2007.10.015) Copyright © 2007 Elsevier Ltd Terms and Conditions

Figure 2 Genetic Code Reprogramming for mRNA-Directed Polyester Synthesis (A) Chemical structure and abbreviation of α-hydroxy acids used in this study. Flac, phenyllactic acid; mFlac, p-methoxyphenyllactic acid; pFlac, p-isopropylphenyllactic acid; cFlac, p-cyanophenyllactic acid; Glac, glycolic acid; Alac, lactic acid; Llac, isopropyllactic acid. The abbreviations used are based on structurally similar amino acids. The stereochemistry of pFlac, mFlac, and cFlac is racemic, whereas that of other α-hydroxy acids is S configuration. All phenyllactic acid derivatives bear a cyanomethyl ester group (LG1) and are charged onto tRNAs shown in Figure 3 using eFlexiresin, while others bear a 3,5-dinitrobenzyl ester group (LG2) and are charged onto the tRNAs using dFlexiresin. (B) The reprogrammed genetic code used in this study. α-hydroxy acids assigned to the respective triplets are color-coded as shown. Chemistry & Biology 2007 14, 1315-1322DOI: (10.1016/j.chembiol.2007.10.015) Copyright © 2007 Elsevier Ltd Terms and Conditions

Figure 3 Three tRNA Body Sequences Used in This Study (A) tRNAAsn-E1NNN. (B) tRNAAsn-E2NNN. (C) tRNAMLAsnNNN. NNN indicates anticodon and each anticodon is color-coded to pair with the corresponding codon shown in Figure 2B. Chemistry & Biology 2007 14, 1315-1322DOI: (10.1016/j.chembiol.2007.10.015) Copyright © 2007 Elsevier Ltd Terms and Conditions

Figure 4 Polyester Synthesis (A) Sequences of mRNA templates (T1–T9), polypeptides (P1–P9), and polyesters (E1–E9). Reprogrammed codons in mRNA (rectangles) and α-hydroxy acids (circles) are highlighted in colors matching those in Figure 2B. Black arrowheads indicate the positions of hydrolyzed ester bonds that give (ha)2-FLAGs observed in Figure 5B. (B) Tricine-SDS-PAGE analysis of the expressed products. The products, labeled with [14C]Asp in the C-terminal FLAG peptide, were detected by autoradiography. Due to the basic conditions (pH 8.5) of the tricine-SDS-PAGE running buffer, each observed band derived from E1–E9 was likely the corresponding (ha)n-FLAG peptide(s) generated by the hydrolysis of full-length polyester. Note that the mobility of the peptide or polyester-peptide hybrid was dependent upon its composition, that is, the net charge or hydrophobicity, and therefore the peptide mobility did not accurately reflect the peptide length. The combination of ha-tRNAs used in each lane for polyester synthesis was as follows: lane 7, Flac-tRNAAsn-E1GUU, mFlac-tRNAAsn-E1GAC, and Llac-tRNAAsn-E2GAA; lane 9, cFlac-tRNAAsn-E1ACU, mFlac-tRNAAsn-E1GAC, and Alac-tRNAMLAsnCUG; lane 11, cFlac-tRNAAsn-E1ACU, Glac-tRNAAsn-E2GGU, and pFlac-tRNAAsn-E2GAG. Chemistry & Biology 2007 14, 1315-1322DOI: (10.1016/j.chembiol.2007.10.015) Copyright © 2007 Elsevier Ltd Terms and Conditions

Figure 5 MALDI-TOF Analysis of Polyesters (A) MALDI-TOF spectra of E1–E4. Calculated mass (M+H) and observed mass (M+H) are presented with the polyester moiety color-coded based on the reprogrammed genetic table shown in Figure 2A. (B) MALDI-TOF spectra of E1 and E5–E9. Calculated mass (M+H) and observed mass (M+H) of full-length (E1 and E5) or (ha)2-FLAG and ha-FLAG (E6–E9) are shown for each spectrum. The fragmented N-terminal products were removed during the FLAG-purification step, and therefore only the C-terminal fragments appear in the spectra. Chemistry & Biology 2007 14, 1315-1322DOI: (10.1016/j.chembiol.2007.10.015) Copyright © 2007 Elsevier Ltd Terms and Conditions